Is DAY a Buy? DAY Stock Analysis & Fair Value (2026)

Our model currently rates DAY as a Sell.

Get the latest investment score, DCF valuation, and buy/sell/hold insights for DAY (DAY).

Last Analyzed: 13/01/2026

Stock Analysis & Score Explanation

DAY (DAY)
$69.40
Fundament Score Analysis
45.55/100
Sell recommendation based on:
  • Fundament Score Analysis
  • Fair Value Analysis
  • Industry Trend
Confidence Level: /10

Fair Value Analysis

Fair value estimate not available

We are unable to provide a fair value analysis for this stock at this time.

Limited Data Available

Some important financial metrics are missing or unavailable. This may affect the accuracy of our analysis.

Missing data: P/E Ratio

Stock Analysis & Score Explanation

This stock receives a score of 45.55/100 with a Sell recommendation. Financial health scored 26.1/55, competitive position 10/25, macro risk assessment 8.34/10, and risk-adjusted returns 1.11/10. The analysis considers current market conditions and fundamental metrics. This score reflects the financial health, growth potential, and overall valuation of the stock, helping investors determine whether it may be overvalued or undervalued. Learn more about the AInvestor Score and how it is calculated. See how we convert scores and fair-value signals into actionable labels in the AInvestor Recommendation glossary entry.

Industry Context: Industrials

Cyclical
📈 Positive

2026 Trend: 📈 Positive Outlook

Positive outlook driven by infrastructure spending (CHIPS, IIJA), nearshoring trends, energy transition capex, and supply chain normalization. Capital equipment orders remain strong despite recession risks and capex cycle peak concerns by 2026-2027.

Bubble Watch: Capex Cycle Peak

Current capex super-cycle (AI, reshoring, green energy) may peak in 2026-2027. Orders deceleration and margin compression could follow the inflection point.

Key 2026 Outlook Points

  • AI automation transforms manufacturing efficiency
  • Supply chain localization creates stable long-term demand
  • Green energy infrastructure requires advanced industrial equipment
  • Digital twins and predictive maintenance becoming standard practice